5 KEY PUBLIC RELATIONS METRICS
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5 KEY PUBLIC RELATIONS METRICS
As a participant in this year’s AMEC Measurement Month
activities, Universal Information Services has prepared a blog series on five
key PR measures. There are potentially an infinite number of elements and
aspects of a PR campaign you can measure, but the five metrics outlined in
this whitepaper can be essential to any program. The importance of these
measures is that they can yield a level of insight helpful to not only your
public relations team, but also the executives and stakeholders holding you
accountable for their public relations.
Each of the five PR metrics below represented one day during the third
week of Measurement Month. For more information visit us at Universal
Information Services or research the evolving work at AMEC, the
International Association for the Measurement and Evaluation of
Communication.
TODD MURPHYVice President
Universal Information Services
PR METRICS THAT MATTERSENTIMENT
Sentiment Analysis:
Identifying and categorizing
opinions expressed in a piece of text or story,
especially in order to determine whether the
writer’s attitude towards a particular topic,
product, etc., is positive, negative, or neutral.
Today we look at Sentiment analysis. By measuring the tone of a media mention , analysts can
help indicate potential feelings towards a product , service , ororganization. Although the
specific definition of sentiment might vary depending on the organization doing your
measurement, we train our professional analysts to view stories in the same manner.
Cross-coder training is critical when judging sentiment so that there is no deviation in metric
values due to personality differences in people.While there are many services offering
automated sentiment analysis based on keywords or phrases, those solutions are generally
only 60% accurate. When preparing a measurement report that needs a higher level of
reliability, a trained analyst is necessary to determine the nuances between “it was an awfully
good movie” and “it was an awful movie”.Having access to the text, video, or audio of the
actual media placement is critical so you or your analysts can determine the true context of
the mention. Some “negative” news stories highlight great solutions and therefore would
represent a positive story to that solution provider if there were presented in a positive light.
This week is focused on North America, as it relates to Measurement Month around the World.
Universal Information Services is participating in an awareness and education campaign
organized by AMEC, the International Association for Measurement and Evaluation of
Communication. These events are sponsored by membership companies and work to better
educate public relations professionals on reliable methodologies for measuring PR and
media.Each day this week Universal will spotlight a specific metric. Since there are dozens of
meaningful metrics an organization can measure, mostly determined by their goals and
anticipated outcomes, we will focus on only five key metrics. Five days, five metrics.
PR METRICS THAT MATTERSOURCE QUALITY
Reach refers to the total number of different
people or households exposed, at least once, to
a medium during a given period. Source quality
is a reflection of a media outlet’s authority in a
specific area of interest, plus the credibility of
their information.
Reach can be an element of Source Quality, but may be insignificant depending on the target
audience and demographic niche you’re focused. For example, if you are targeting a very
narrow interest group with your key messages, and the media sources serving that interest
group have a very low circulation or audience value relative to mainstream media, automated
measurement may discount that Reach as being “low”. This would be a mistake.
Niche media sources may have low circulation, audience, or follower numbers, but the total
sum of the audience may be equally small. Therefore, the reach for that source would actually
be high. Again, this illustrates the importance of checking your measurement methodology
and having human analysts making proper inferences from the resulting outputs and
measures.
We’re interested in hearing your thoughts, concerns or failures related to Source Quality and
Reach. Tomorrow we will focus on why identifying Key Messages before measurement, and
locating their placement within your media results is so important.
Universal Information Services is participating in an awareness and education campaign
organized by AMEC ,the International Association for Measurement and Evaluation of
Communication. These events are sponsored by membership companies and work to better
educate public relations professionals on reliable methodologies for measuring PR and
media.
Each day this week Universal will spotlight a specific metric. Yesterday we covered Sentiment
and Tone. Today we’re going to briefly discuss the how Source Quality and Reach impact
your measurement results.
PR METRICS THAT MATTERKEY MESSAGES
Key Messages are the phrases you craft and
specifically want to appear in your media
exposure. Message penetration indicates the
prevalence of these messages, a quantitative
measure, across all possible messages.
Tracking Key Messages is particularly helpful when your campaign or organization has
multiple messages and you want to see which ones are performing best. From this type of
analysis, a professional analyst can determine how the media is responding to your efforts,
how widespread your messages are travelling, and what second degree networks are
amplifying your message.
Amplification of a message, either from traditional media into social media or vice versa, only
expands the message penetration and reach of your effort. Establishing key messages is done
during the planning stages of a campaign and prior to the start of measurement. Measuring
key messages after the fact is possible, but should be established as part of your planning.
Tomorrow we’ll discuss Exposure Volume, another quantitative measure that some believe
has limited impact of the efficacy of your measurement. You will see how key messages and
message amplification impact exposure. Until then, let us know any thoughts or concerns you
have related to Key Messages.
Universal Information Services is participating in an awareness and education campaign
organized by AMEC, the International Association for Measurement and Evaluation of
Communication. These events are sponsored by membership companies and work to better
educate public relations professionals on reliable methodologies for measuring PR and
media.
Each day this week Universal has spotlighted a specific metric. Yesterday we covered Source
Quality and Reach. Today we will drill down on why identifying Key Messages before
measurement, and locating their placement within your media results, is so important.
PR METRICS THAT MATTERMEDIA EXPOSURE
Media Exposure quantifies the amount of
attention that television, radio, online media,
social media and newspapers give to a specific
story. The volume of media exposure is simply
the measurement of that attention and can be
represented in terms of number of mentions,
stories or share of voice when compared to other
specific topics.
In a fixed media market, where the placement opportunities remain static, tracking the
volume of media exposure can be an indicator of the receptiveness the media has towards
your stories or organization. When performing competitive measurements, tracking your
volume of exposure relative to the competition, can generate an effective share of voice
metric.Whether a strict volume of media placements as an indicator of message penetration,
or as a share of voice comparison, understanding volume of media coverage can still have an
important role in calculating the effectiveness on your public relations effort. Exposure
Volume should not be a stand-alone metric as it yields little to know information about
behavioral changes or modified market actions. But when used with other qualitative metrics
in can be a very helpful indicator of effort.Our final metric will resolve how several of these
measures can be formulated to determine true impact of your public relations efforts.
Tomorrow we will look at Universal Information Services’ Impact Score, a metric that
combines qualitative and quantitative measures in order to yield a relative number for
evaluating individual stories, time frames, and campaigns. In the meantime, share your
experiences with calculating media exposure and any concerns you have with that measure.
Universal Information Services is participating in an awareness and education campaign
organized by AMEC, the International Association for Measurement and Evaluation of
Communication. These events are sponsored by membership companies and work to better
educate public relations professionals on reliable methodologies for measuring PR and
media.
Each day this week Universal has defined one of five key metrics important to public relations
measurement. Yesterday we covered Key Messages and Message Penetration. Today we will
look at how the volume of Media Exposure can affect your measured results.
PR METRICS THAT MATTERIMPACT SCORE
The Impact Score takes into account the
number of qualitative driver conditions met
AND the media source. Points are given in two
areas: 1-qualitative points and 2-media source
points.
The Impact Score statistic unveils the true impact of a story; a weighted factor our clients can use to
understand the impact from each news story and compare that value relative to other stories. The
value of this metric is to remove the false value imparted by quantitative measures only, and deliver
a weighted value you can use to compare stories across time. It’s particularly useful when used as part
of an ongoing PR measurement program.Capturing both the qualitative and quantitative elements of
media exposure has never been easy, nor an exact science. However, through a sound media
measurement framework, like the approach used at Universal, we can evaluate what your media
exposure means in terms of impact, value, tone, focus, and a variety of other user-defined parameters.
Those who need to understand the ROI and impact of their outreach efforts can get truly actionable
data when following a reliable methodology.As this post is the last in our five-part series on Metrics
that Matter, we hope you’ve found these posts informational if not enlightening. We recognize that a
few paragraphs can’t do justice to the broad topic of reliable media measurement. And although
we’ve tried to be concise with our definitions, there is always more to the story. We encourage you to
contact your professional media measurement service or reach out to us for additional information.
We would be happy to expand on the topics briefly covered this week.It would also be improper for
us to not recognize the research and work AMEC has put forth in raising awareness for media
measurement at a global level. We look forward to our continued collaboration with them and our
partner company members. If you have additional questions we have more information on our public
relations tools at Universal-info.com.
Universal Information Services is participating in an awareness and education campaign
organized by AMEC, the International Association for Measurement and Evaluation of
Communication. These events are sponsored by membership companies and work to better
educate public relations professionals on reliable methodologies for measuring PR and media.
Each day this week Universal has defined one of five key metrics important to public relations
measurement. Yesterday we explored how the volume of Media Exposure alters the results of
your analysis. In this last post of our five post series, we will look at our proprietary Impact
Score.
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